• Title/Summary/Keyword: Nuclear architecture

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Development of reutilization system for Nuclear Power Plant Component using Object-Oriented Systems Engineering Method

  • Yeo, Tae Ho;Kim, Tae Ryong;Kim, Chang Lak
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Systems Engineering
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.69-80
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to establish a component reutilization system in Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) by Object-Oriented Systems Engineering Method (OOSEM). Unified Modeling Language (UML) is mainly used for OOSEM. Operational Concept (OpsCon), Use cases, Structure Diagrams, and Behavior Diagrams are developed to analyze stakeholders needs, system requirements, logical architecture, and physical architecture. Based on the current decommissioning and purchasing system of the component, some activities from their systems were excepted and additional new activities were developed for a component reutilization system.

Improved reactor regulating system logical architecture using genetic algorithm

  • Shim, Hyo-Sub;Jung, Jae-Chun
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.49 no.8
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    • pp.1696-1710
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    • 2017
  • An improved Reactor Regulating System (RRS) logic architecture, which is combined with genetic algorithm (GA), is implemented in this work. It is devised to provide an optimal solution to the current RRS. The current system works desirably and has contributed to safe and stable nuclear power plant operation. However, during the ascent and descent section of the reactor power, the RRS output reveals a relatively high steady-state error, and the output also carries a considerable level of overshoot. In an attempt to consolidate conservatism and minimize the error, this work proposes to apply GA to RRS and suggests reconfiguring the system. Prior to the use of GA, reverse engineering is implemented to build a Simulink-based RRS model. Reengineering is followed to produce a newly configured RRS to generate an output that has a reduced steady-state error and diminished overshoot level. A full-scope APR1400 simulator is used to examine the dynamic behaviors of RRS and to build the RRS Simulink model.

Effect of slab stiffness on floor response spectrum and fragility of equipment in nuclear power plant building

  • Yousang Lee;Ju-Hyung Kim;Hong-Gun Park
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.55 no.11
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    • pp.3956-3972
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    • 2023
  • The floor response spectrum (FRS) is used to evaluate the seismic demand of equipment installed in nuclear power plants. In the conventional design practice of NPP structure, the FRS is simplified using the lumped-mass stick model (LMSM), assuming the floor slab as a rigid diaphragm. In the present study, to study the variation of seismic response in a floor, the FRSs at different locations were generated by 3-D finite element model, and the response was compared to that of the rigid diaphragm model. The result showed that the FRS significantly varied due to the large opening in a floor, which was not captured by the rigid diaphragm model. Based on the result, seismic fragility analysis was performed for the anchorage of a heat exchanger, to investigate the effect of location-dependent FRS disparity on the high confidence low probability of failure (HCLPF).

Architectural model driven dependability analysis of computer based safety system in nuclear power plant

  • Wakankar, Amol;Kabra, Ashutosh;Bhattacharjee, A.K.;Karmakar, Gopinath
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.51 no.2
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    • pp.463-478
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    • 2019
  • The most important non-functional requirements for dependability of any Embedded Real-Time Safety Systems are safety, availability and reliability requirements. System architecture plays the primary role in achieving these requirements. Compliance with these non-functional requirements should be ensured early in the development cycle with appropriate considerations during architectural design. In this paper, we present an application of system architecture modeling for quantitative assessment of system dependability. We use probabilistic model checker (PRISM), for dependability analysis of the DTMC model derived from system architecture model. In general, the model checking techniques do not scale well for analyzing large systems, because of prohibitively large state space. It limits the use of model checking techniques in analyzing the systems of practical interest. We propose abstraction based compositional analysis methodology to circumvent this limitation. The effectiveness of the proposed methodology has been demonstrated using the case study involving the dependability analysis of safety system of a large Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR).

ANALYZING DYNAMIC FAULT TREES DERIVED FROM MODEL-BASED SYSTEM ARCHITECTURES

  • Dehlinger, Josh;Dugan, Joanne Bechta
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.40 no.5
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    • pp.365-374
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    • 2008
  • Dependability-critical systems, such as digital instrumentation and control systems in nuclear power plants, necessitate engineering techniques and tools to provide assurances of their safety and reliability. Determining system reliability at the architectural design phase is important since it may guide design decisions and provide crucial information for trade-off analysis and estimating system cost. Despite this, reliability and system engineering remain separate disciplines and engineering processes by which the dependability analysis results may not represent the designed system. In this article we provide an overview and application of our approach to build architecture-based, dynamic system models for dependability-critical systems and then automatically generate dynamic fault trees (DFT) for comprehensive, tool-supported reliability analysis. Specifically, we use the Architectural Analysis and Design Language (AADL) to model the structural, behavioral and failure aspects of the system in a composite architecture model. From the AADL model, we seek to derive the DFT(s) and use Galileo's automated reliability analyses to estimate system reliability. This approach alleviates the dependability engineering - systems engineering knowledge expertise gap, integrates the dependability and system engineering design and development processes and enables a more formal, automated and consistent DFT construction. We illustrate this work using an example based on a dynamic digital feed-water control system for a nuclear reactor.

NPP I&C Architecture Design and Its Traffic Load Analysis

  • Lee, Cheol-Kwon;Kim, Dong-Hoon;Oh, In-Seok;Shin, Jae-Hwal;Yun, Jae-Hee;Sur, Joong-Surk
    • Proceedings of the KIEE Conference
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    • 2005.05a
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    • pp.75-77
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    • 2005
  • An integrated I&C architecture for nuclear power plants is designed by the systems and devices being developed in a project. Its design reference is the APR1400 that was design certified in Korea. Digital equipment and several kinds of data communication networks (DCN) are used. To confirm the validity of DCN based architecture design, the traffic loads fur each network were calculated assuming the anticipated maximum traffic condition. The analysis showed that the utilizations of all networks satisfied the design requirements.

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Systems Engineering Process Approach to the Probabilistic Safety Assessment for a Spent Fuel Pool of a Nuclear Power Plant (사용후핵연료저장조의 확률론적안전성평가 수행을 위한 시스템엔지니어링 프로세스 적용 연구)

  • Choi, Jin Tae;Cha, Woo Chang
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Systems Engineering
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.82-90
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    • 2021
  • The spent fuel pool (SFP) of a nuclear power plant functions to store the spent fuel. The spent fuel pool is designed to properly remove the decay heat generated from the spent fuel. If the cooling function is lost and proper operator action is not taken, the spent fuel in the storage pool can be damaged. Probabilistic safety assessment (PSA) is a safety evaluation method that can evaluate the risk of a large and complex system. So far, the probabilistic safety assessment of nuclear power plants has been mainly performed on the reactor. This study defined the requirements and the functional architecture for the probabilistic safety assessment of the spent fuel pool (SFP-PSA) by applying the systems engineering process. And, a systematic and efficient methodology was defined according to the architecture.

Development of the remote controlled robotic system in nuclear facilities (원자력시설내의 원격 제어 로보트 시스템 개발)

  • 황석용;손석원;김승호;이종민
    • 제어로봇시스템학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 1989.10a
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    • pp.230-234
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    • 1989
  • This paper presents the design of a prototype robot and architecture of a distributed control system. The robot, named as KAEROT, has been developed for the purpose of the reduction of personal radiation exposure and the remote maintenance tasks in nuclear facilities. The mobile system with robotic manipulator has been designed to go up and down stairs. For the dextrous handling, this manipulator will be designed as a redundant type to act like a human arm. Manipulator control system is to be extended easily for further usage with a modular architecture to get independency and reliability by minimizing EMI effects.

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